Press release
Insufficient communication with public threatens NHS IT
investments
- Study by ntl:Telewest Business reveals positive impact of
e-services on patient care could be stalled by poor public
awareness
20 July 2006 - Have you put off seeing your doctor because you
find it impossible to book an appointment? Almost a quarter (23%)
of people in Great Britain have, according to a major new study
from business communications provider ntl:Telewest Business.
The study entitled ‘Digital NHS’ also revealed that the billion
pound investment in the rollout of digital services across Great
Britain could have a positive impact on improving patient care and
tackling long appointment waiting times. However, this improvement
could be stalled due to a lack of general public awareness of
e-services provided by GPs (General Practitioners) that could
hamper their immediate take-up.
More than half (54%) of people surveyed didn’t know whether
their GP provided electronic appointment bookings, appointment
reminders or prescriptions. In addition, more than a quarter (28%)
of people had no knowledge of digital services such as NHS Direct
Online, Choose & Book, HealthSpace or Track Health Online.
These have all been publicised by the government as part of its
Connecting for Health programme.
According to the study, the lack of public awareness of digital
services can be attributed to insufficient communication. An
alarming 92% of people have never been informed about these
services.
“Improving public communications will be critical to realising
the potential of e-services.”, said Christopher Small, Director of
Public Sector at ntl:Telewest Business. “To achieve a return on the
billion pound investment Great Britain has made in its IT
infrastructure, people need to be better informed on basic
e-services nationally. Otherwise this will pose a serious risk to
how quickly people embrace the digital NHS and how fast we reap the
benefits in different regions.”
The impact of digital services on helping GPs improve patient
care was also highlighted by the Digital NHS study. Patients’
failure to attend appointments that they have booked is a well
known drain on NHS services, costing the NHS an estimated millions
of pounds a year and increasing appointment waiting times.
The study revealed that while nearly one in 10 (9%)
respondents had booked appointments at their GPs and then forgotten
to attend, more than three quarters (81%) of respondents would have
remembered if they had been sent a reminder by phone, email or
SMS.
The most cited reasons for missing appointments were a failure
to make a record of appointment times (55% of respondents) and
appointments being booked too far in advance (39% of
respondents).
Small continued: “Beyond the financial burden, a price cannot be
estimated for the cost to patient care from increased patient
waiting times. Our study shows that digital services have a part to
play in helping the NHS tackle some of the serious inefficiencies
that are riddling its system. As the rollout of e-services gathers
pace across Great Britain, it is vital that the public is kept
better informed.”
The ntl:Telewest Business' Digital NHS study 2006, which
polled more than 2,200 people across Great Britain, was conducted
on behalf of ntl:Telewest Business by public research specialist
YouGov. The study sought to examine the public’s awareness of
NHS digital services and their likely impact on improving patient
care.
Key findings of the research also included:
- 17% of people feel their GP keeps them waiting too long even
when they have a scheduled appointment; and 15% are put off seeing
their GP because they need to take too much time out of work for an
appointment.
- The most preferred methods of receiving appointment reminders
were: by email (41% of respondents) and by SMS/text (25% of
respondents).
- The public is disappointed with the general level of direct
communication they get on public health issues. Nearly one in
10 people (17%) felt that this was bad.
- Digital communications also have a role to play in keeping the
public informed. Email (55% of respondents) was the most preferred
method for receiving information.
About ntl:Telewest Business
ntl:Telewest Business, part of the UK’s second
largest fixed-line telecommunications company, is a leading
communications provider to businesses, public sector organisations
and service providers in the UK. It delivers a complete portfolio
of voice, data and internet solutions nation-wide.
ntl:Telewest Business sales and support
teams are located across the UK, in close proximity to our
customers, as part of a commitment to deliver superior customer
service.
ntl:Telewest Business delivers services over
the Group’s £13bn investment in its state-of-the-art
infrastructure giving business customers access to the largest
alternative network in the UK.
ntl:Telewest Business is trusted to provide
critical communications to high profile customers
including: Heathrow's Terminal 5, Birmingham City Council and
Cambridgeshire County Council.
ntl:Telewest Business press contacts: